2 resultados para serious mental illness

em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal


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A depressão é uma perturbação mental que provoca um impacto negativo na vida dos doentes. O tratamento desta patologia pode ser realizado através de terapêutica farmacológica, ou de intervenções psicoterapêuticas. A Psicoeducação é uma modalidade de tratamento, que tem vindo a ganhar um lugar em destaque no processo de recuperação de determinadas doenças mentais. Esta abordagem tem como principal objetivo fornecer informações ao doente sobre a sua situação clínica e disponibilizar ferramentas para lidar com as particularidades do problema de saúde. As intervenções psicoeducativas são realizadas através de sessões expositivas de conhecimentos técnicos sobre a depressão. Assim, o objetivo do presente trabalho é apresentar um programa de psicoeducação, dando principal enfoque ao papel dos vários métodos e técnicas pedagógicas utilizadas no mesmo; Abstract: The importance of psychoeducation in changing the mood in depressed patients Depression is a mental disorder that causes a negative impact on patients' lives. Treatment of this condition may be achieved through drug therapy, or psychotherapeutic intervention. The Psychoeducational is a treatment modality that has gained importance because of the positive impact it has on the recovery of certain mental illness process. This approach aims to provide information to the patient about their medical situation and provide tools to deal with the particularities of the health problem. The psychoeducational interventions are carried out through expository sessions of technical knowledge about depression. The objective of this study is to present a psychoeducation program, giving primary focus to the role of various educational methods and techniques used in it.

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Although suicidality is associated with mental illness in general and depression in particular, many depressed individuals do not attempt suicide and some individuals who attempt to or do die by suicide do not present depressive symptoms. This article aims to contribute to a more psychosocial approach to understanding suicide risk in nonclinical populations. In advocating a psychosocial perspective rather than a depression-focused approach, this article presents four diverse studies that demonstrate sampling and measurement invariance in findings across different populations and specific measures. Study 1 tests the mediation effects of 2 interpersonal variables, thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness, in the association between depressive symptoms and recent suicidality. Studies 2 and 3 evaluate the contribution of hopelessness and psychache, beyond depressive symptoms, to suicidality. Study 4 tests the contribution of life events behind depressive symptoms, and other relevant sociodemographic and clinical variables, to the estimation of “future suicidality.” Overall, results demonstrate that depressive symptoms do not directly predict suicidality in nonclinical individuals, but that other psychosocial variables mediate the association between depressive symptoms and suicidality or predict suicidality when statistically controlling for depressive symptoms. The article contributes to understanding some of the nonpsychopathological factors that potentially link depressive symptoms to suicide risk and that might themselves contribute to suicidality, even when controlling for depressive symptoms.